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CS 414 - Spring 2012 CS 414 – Multimedia Systems Design Lecture 15 –QoS Admission, QoS Negotiation, and Establishment of AV Connections Klara Nahrstedt Spring 2012
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CS 414 - Spring 2012 Administrative HW1 posted today, February 22 HW1 deadline, March 1
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Covered Aspects of Multimedia Image/Video Capture Media Server Storage Transmission Compression Processing Audio/Video Presentation Playback Audio/Video Perception/ Playback Audio Information Representation Transmission Audio Capture A/V Playback Image/Video Information Representation CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Multimedia System/Network CS 414 - Spring 2012 Network MM Application OS/DS/Network MM Application OS/DS/Network SenderReceiver
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Relation between QoS and Resources (Phase 1) CS 414 - Spring 2012 Translation, Negotiation Admission, Reservation
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Phase 1: Establishment Phase (QoS Operations) CS 414 - Spring 2012 QoS Translation at different Layers User-Application Application-OS/Transport Subsystem QoS Negotiation Negotiation of QoS parameters among two peers/components
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Phase 1: Connection Establishment CS 414 - Spring 2012 Network MM Application OS/DS/Network MM Application OS/DS/Network SenderReceiver Translation Logical Negotiation of Network QoS Parameters Physical Transmission of Negotiation Parameters Logical Negotiation of Application QoS Parameters
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QoS Operations within Establishment Phase CS 414 - Spring 2012 User/Application QoS Translation Overlay P2P QoS Negotiation Application/Transport QoS Translation QoS Negotiation in Transport Subsystem
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Example Video Stream Quality: Frame size: 320x240 pixels, 24 bits (3 Bytes per pixel) Application frame rate RA: 20 fps Translate to Network QoS if Assume network packet size is 4KBytes Network packet rate (RN):= ┌ 320x240x3x20 ┐ bytes / 4096 bytes CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Layered Translation (Example) CS 414 - Spring 2012
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QoS Negotiation CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Different Types of Negotiation Protocols Bilateral Peer-to-Peer Negotiation Negotiation of QoS parameters between equal peers in the same layer Triangular Negotiation Negotiation of QoS parameters between layers Triangular Negotiation with Bounded Value CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Bilateral QoS Negotiation CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Triangular QoS Negotiation CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Triangular Negotiation with Bounded Value CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Triangular Negotiation Protocol (Pseudo-Code Example) CS 414 - Spring 2012 CallerCallee Network-Service Provider Pseudo-Code Caller Pseudo-Code Callee Pseudo-Code
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Multimedia Resource Management Resource managers with operations and resource management protocols Various operations must be performed by resource managers in order to provide QoS Phase 1: Establishment Phase (resource operations) Operations are executed where schedulable units utilizing shared resources must be admitted, reserved and allocated according to QoS requirements Phase 2: Enforcement Phase Operations are executed where reservations and allocations must be enforced, and adapted if needed CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Phase 1: Resource Preparation Operations QoS to Resource Mapping Need translation or profiling (e.g., how much processing CPU cycles, i.e., processing time, it takes to process 320x240 pixel video frame) Resource Admission Need admission tests to check availability of shared resources Resource Reservation Need reservation mechanisms along the end-to- end path to keep information about reservations Resource Allocation CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Phase 1: Connection Establishment CS 414 - Spring 2012 Network MM Application OS/DS/Network MM Application OS/DS/Network SenderReceiver Translation Logical Negotiation of Net QoS Parameters Physical Transmission of Negotiation Parameters Network Resource Reservation Protocol Network Resource Admission and Resource Reservation System Resource Admission and Reservation Logical Negotiation of App QoS Parameters
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Admission Tests Task (System) schedulability tests for CPU resources This is done for delay guarantees Network Packet schedulability tests for sharing host network interfaces, network switches This is done for network delay and jitter guarantees Spatial tests for memory/buffer allocation This is done for delay and reliability guarantees Network Link bandwidth tests This is done for network throughput guarantees CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Resource Reservation and Allocation Two types of reservations Pessimistic approach - Worst case reservation of resources Optimistic approach - Average case reservation of resources To implement resource reservation we need: Resource table to capture information about managed table (e.g., process management PID table) Reservation table to capture reservation information Reservation function to map QoS to resources and operate over reservation table CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Resource Reservation Two types of reservation styles: Sender-initiated reservation Receiver-initiated reservation CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Relation between QoS and Resources (Phase 2) CS 414 - Spring 2012 Translation, Negotiation Admission, Reservation Scheduling, Rate Control, Error Control Flow Control QoS Management Compression
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Phase 2: Media Processing and Transmission CS 414 - Spring 2012 Network MM Application OS/DS/Network MM Application OS/DS/Network SenderReceiver Physical Transmission of Media Network Resource Scheduling System Resource Scheduling Rate Control Flow Control Error Control
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Phase 2: Enforcement Operations Resource scheduling Example: rate-monotonic scheduling Rate control – traffic shaping Example: leaky bucket End-to-end error control Example: forward error correction Flow control Open loop flow control (no feedback) Close look flow control (with feedback channel) CS 414 - Spring 2012
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QoS Management during Transmission Phase Resource and QoS Monitoring Flexibility, i.e., monitoring should be turned on/off Two types of monitoring User-mode monitoring Network-mode monitoring QoS Maintenance Compares monitored QoS with contract QoS QoS Degradation graceful degradation needed CS 414 - Spring 2012
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QoS Management during Transmission Phase QoS Renegotiation and Signaling In case QoS parameters need to change, renegotiation must be initiated QoS/Resource Adaptation As a result of re-negotiation request (request for change in quality) adaptation in QoS and resource allocation must happen CS 414 - Spring 2012
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QoS/Resource Adaptation Renegotiation request can come from User Host system Network Resource adaptation Network adaptation (e.g., dynamic re-routing mechanism) Source adaptation (e.g., temporal scaling with feedback) CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Resource De-allocation – Tear- Down Phase Reserved Resource must be freed up once multimedia session is over Tear-down process Sender-initiated closing (release reservation) Receiver-initiated closing (release reservation) CS 414 - Spring 2012
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Conclusion – Current State of Art Lack of mechanisms to support QoS guarantees Need research in distributed control, monitoring, adaptation and maintenance of QoS mechanisms Lack of overall frameworks Need QoS frameworks for heterogeneous environments (diverse networks, diverse devices, diverse OS) CS 414 - Spring 2012
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